Wednesday, March 25, 2015

After many years of being a vegetarian, I can no longer claim to be one. Before you judge me, please read
my story.

I grew up as a typical animal-loving kid and as soon as I was a teenager and
put two-and-two together, I finally gave up meat and became a vegetarian. I
felt righteous! I felt virtuous! I had found my way!

For most of those 12 years, I was happy and content. I would bring my egg salad
sandwiches to work for lunch and order the vegetarian option when I went out
with friends. No chicken wings for this animal lover. Over time, though, I
started to not feel as passionate about being a vegetarian. The more I thought
about it, the less that it meant anything to me. I felt like I was just going
through the motions. Eventually, I decided to do the very thing no one I was
close to would ever imagine possible. I became an ex-vegetarian. It was a
process with some ups-and-downs, partially because my self-identity had become so
entwined with my vegetarianism, but eventually, I gave it up for good. Today, I have
to say, I’ve never felt better: body, mind and spirit.

As a former vegetarian,
I feel that I am uniquely qualified to speak to the elephant in the room
(actually a whole herd of ‘em) about vegetarianism, having been one for so
long. I hope my words here help anyone else who is conflicted about being a
vegetarian. Maybe some of you have also struggled with vegetarianism? Here are some reasons why today I am a proud former vegetarian.

1. Being a vegetarian was not convenient. The harm and destruction of eggs and dairy became
an inconvenient truth that was increasingly difficult to ignore. The more I
learned, the less mollifying the justifications became, which made excuses very
inconvenient.

2.
I felt weak when I was a vegetarian.
Feeling controlled by the cruel dairy and egg industries did not exactly instill
a sense of self-empowerment within me.

3. I felt excluded. All these amazing
vegans were changing the world for the better and there I was still chewing on
eggs and gulping down milk. I wanted to be on the right side of history, not
supporting industries that I find abhorrent, so I became an ex-vegetarian.

4. I felt limited. When my interest in
maintaining my habits was greater than my concern about other living beings or the future of the planet, I
realized that I was very limited in my capacity to extend compassion to others.

5. I had cravings. I craved being self-reliant,
aligned from within and to maintain consistency with my values and practices but
eating animal products made it impossible for me to attain those things. The
cravings just got worse and worse the more I learned.

6. It didn’t feel natural. Going
against my values each time I ate animal products was counter-intuitive and
every time I did, it felt unnatural for me because I was buttressing the very industries
that compelled me to stop eating meat in the first place.

7. I didn’t want to be different anymore.
I didn’t want to be different – in fact, I needed to be different, which meant finding my own compass for my morality instead of just fitting in and not making waves.

8. I wasn’t listening to my body. My
brain is part of my body: my brain was telling me that I understood how harmful
and violent the animal products industries are and my actions went against this
until I finally listened.9. I always felt hungry. I hungered
for feeling a deeper connection to the planet and to others; cutting off my
innate empathy every time I ate animal products only made my hunger for this
more pronounced.

10. I realized that farm animals didn’t
have it so bad. Whether one eats “free-range” eggs or cheese from “happy cows,”
a tyranny of cruelty, domination and needless violence is intertwined with
animal agribusiness no matter what the packaging looks like. Also, the flesh
that people eat comes from animals who aren’t brutalized any worse than those
we subjugate for their secreted fluids.

11. I didn’t want to be rude. It’s
kind of the ultimate rude thing to behave as if my temporary cravings matters
more than one’s very life. Actually, rude doesn’t even begin to cover it.

12. It was a spiritual thing. How
was I going to function as a spiritual being when I was complicit in harming
others? Nonviolence, compassion, justice, empathy: these things are consistent
with creating a spiritual life. Violence, cruelty, injustice, self-involvement?
Not so much.

13. Ultimately, it was just too hard.
It was hard to deny my deepening convictions. It was hard to maintain the
status quo when my word and my self-respect were at stake. It was hard to be
complicit in a lie. It was hard to quell my feelings. It was hard to deny what
I knew. Ultimately, it was just too hard to remain a vegetarian.

Please don’t let
anyone pressure you into staying vegetarian. As you can see, so much of my
vegetarianism was fueled by unexamined myths, habituated behaviors, a desire to please others and self-sabotage.
I look back at that vegetarian I used to be and I know that I intended to do
the right thing, I just didn’t know any better. I was so naïve. Don’t be like
me; don’t waste 12 long years as a vegetarian when you can evolve and move on
to the next logical step toward manifesting your convictions about kindness. If
you listen to your innate wisdom, do some research, tune into your compassion
and move toward the future, you can leave the self-deception and harmful practices
in the past.

Like me, you can go vegan. Today, I am proud to say I’m former vegetarian. Are you a vegetarian like I was? Maybe it's time you go all the way, too.

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

I’ve been vegan long enough to know that vegan
and style are not two words that have
always gone together so harmoniously. As a movement rooted in a passionately-held
ethical foundation, this is not surprising: we’re too busy saving the world to
care much about how we look while doing it. But do style and ethics need to be
mutually exclusive? Can’t we have a love of aesthetics while still rocking out
with our powerful message? Thankfully, we are living in a time when false
dichotomies are burning to the ground as designers, artists, entrepreneurs and
the fashion-forward are proving to the world that these two things – ethics and
style – don’t need to be mutually exclusive. What’s more, today we can live
green from head-to-toe using recycled, re-purposed and toxin-free options. Leading
the charge for the past 16 years has been Chloé Jo Davis, founder of GirlieGirl Army.

Known as the “Glamazon Guide to Green Living,” GGA has amassed hundreds of
thousands of devotees under Chloé Jo’s unapologetically confident direction,
helping the world at large learn more about everything from cruelty-free cosmetics
to gentle parenting, vegan noshes to eco-friendly crafts, all served up alongside
a current list of adoptable animals. All of this (and more) is on the GGA
website and by signing up for their newsletter, you can have all the links to new content, along with other
carefully curated news links, delivered to your email once a week to stay au courant.
As a mama (soon to be of three), speaker, writer and content creator at
About.com’s green living series,
Chloé Jo proves that a having a beautiful heart and living a purposeful life
does not mean that your personal style needs to suffer for it. For these
reasons and more, Chloé Jo Davis is a Vegan Rockstar you should know.

1. First of all, we’d love to hear your
“vegan evolution” story. How did you start out? Did you have any early
influences or experiences as a young person that in retrospect helped to pave
your path?

I always had an
innate sense of compassion for the underdog - growing up in a family like mine,
I had to as a survival mechanism! It was a slow path that turned to a fast
roar, first by dating a boy who had a big dog I was afraid of and slowly came
to deeply love, then by adopting my own two mutts, and then dating a vegan and
learning about factory farming. But really the full evolution came by
education. Really steeping my mental tea bag into the world of animal
agriculture, health, and karmic consciousness. A full monty of the full picture
is what my Libran mind needed to see, and see it did! It was a very finite,
almost British-no-nonsense definitive choice to never again contribute to
suffering and hell for our sentient neighbors once many books were read and
many documentaries watched.

I've come to see now, as I've watched so many come
and go from veganism, that it really has to start and end at a love or respect
for animals. Because if it's just health, it's easy to slack off a diet -
and if it's just environmental, it's easy to rationalize having a hen in your
backyard for eggs or choosing "local" beef over tofu from another state.
I've seen too many narcissists fall off the boat once their raw food cleanse
has ended. It has to be a deep love of animals and of being just - it starts
and ends with your scruples. No way you can see what goes on with animals in
factory farms and think that skews okay mentally. The 16 years I was blessed to
have with my two rescue mutts showed me true, authentic love for the first time
in my life – ‘til my Husband and children. I know that all animals can and do
feel pain, love, calm, fear, and anguish - just like us. My Husband and I
took the full leap together almost a decade ago, and I think that informed the
choice too - knowing we were going to spend the rest of our lives together and
have a family and knowing we wanted to do things right. And being vegan just
feels right when all the logic is displayed and the facts are clear.

2. Imagine that you are pre-vegan again: how
could someone have talked to you and what could they have said or shown you
that could have been the most effective way to have a positive influence on you
moving toward veganism?

Really - all I'd
have needed was someone I respected to show me a documentary. For my husband it
was the original Peaceable Kingdom
- I showed it to him and he went vegan that day. And he was raised on a
truly all-American crappy diet, so for him it was a bigger transition than me
who did eat a lot of healthy organic vegetarian food growing up Kosher in NYC.
I always tell women with non-vegan partners, if they can watch Earthlings
or Vegucated or Peaceable Kingdom - or any of the
other powerful animal docs, and not go veg - they may have a compassion gene
missing and you may want to move on. And if you’re dating a science or health-minded
person who can read The China Studyand not realize there's no way to beat the scientific fact of plant-based
superiority, then they are wearing blinders. For some people it's a slow crawl,
and I support people on any place on their path with GirlieGirlArmy.com
- I've been personally answering every vegan email question for 16 years,
sometimes it's as simple as having the right answers for replacement foods or
having a good community.

3. What have you found to be the most effective
way to communicate your message as a vegan? For example, humor, passion,
images, etc.?

GirlieGirlArmy.com was the first vegan/ethical beauty and
fashion website - we started over 15 years ago. People often ask if we are
annoyed by how many copycats are out there since, and I always say not at all!
The more people promoting kindness in a beautiful way, the better! So we were
the first to use terms like "compassionista" or "veganista"
and "glamazon" in reference to a plant-based lifestyle. My original
intention was to be almost snobbish, "You put dead carcass in your body?
How GAUCHE!" type of tongue-in-cheek attitude over the general apologetic
downtrodden quiet so many vegans take on. It then become over the top humor and
style, which I still think works wonderfully. I think what's not effective is
stiff or boring messaging. But I prefer a firm message over a weeble-wobbling
one.

4. What do you think are the biggest strengths
of the vegan movement?

The level of
intelligence in our community blows my mind. The vegans I know are the smartest
people I've ever met. They are all seekers and not afraid to step out of
the dominant paradigm. That's so inspirational and radical. Sure, there's
always a stray a-hole, phony, or grody self-promoter in the mix - but they are
generally easy to spot and weed out. The crux of the movement rallies around
the concept of doing what's right. How many other communities can claim that?

5. What do you think are our biggest hindrances
to getting the word out effectively?

I don't really think
we have any anymore with the virility of the Internet and so many celebs going
veg…but I think our biggest hindrance may be apologists. It's a pet peeve of
mine in general to not be loud and proud about whoever you are.

6. All of us need a “why vegan” elevator pitch.
We’d love to hear yours.

Baby animals cry for
their Mother's when separated, and Mama cows bellow for their babies for days
and will sometimes jump a fence to find their young. Some people don't even
realize Mama Cows need to be kept impregnated on a rape rack and have baby
after baby ripped from her to become veal in order for her to keep producing
milk. People genuinely think Bessie the cow just makes milk on the mountain all
the live long day. We are so separated from our food animals in this culture,
that what needs to happen is more visits to factory farms. Go and visit one and
see what you are choosing to contribute to. What we do to animals in modern
farming is nothing short of a holocaust.

Animal agriculture via methane is also the biggest offense to global warming -
even the UN says the world has to go plant-based based on their studies. And
from a health perspective it's a no-brainer, diseases are literally reversed
when people take on a plant based diet. There's a reason for doctors like
Dr. Robert Ostfeld
- the Director of the Cardiac Wellness Program at Montefiore Medical Center
- promotes an exclusively vegan diet. Because it's simply healthier in every
way possible. So it's a triage of obvious: ahimsa/non-harming and not wanting
to torture animals, caring about the earth, and wanting to live long, healthy
lives. There's no reason not to with all the replacement products we have now…love
cheese? You can still eat it -- just choose cashew cheese! Adore chicken? Fine
- eat chicken - just eat plant-based chicken. The analogs we have now are
cleaner and more delicious than ever. It's nonsensical to choose any other way,
unless you literally live in a hut on the edge of the world, and even there,
lentils and rice exist! Lentils have more protein than beef anyway, so there.

7. Who are the people and what are the books,
films, websites and organizations that have had the greatest influence on your
veganism and your continuing evolution?

The films I think I
mentioned above. There are an endless stream of books on veganism now -- I think
for a science/medical-minded person, nothing will beat The China Study.

8. Burn-out is so common among vegans: what do
you do to unwind, recharge and inspire yourself?

Sometimes I take a
step out from events and online controversy. I used to argue with any
contrartian carnivore who wanted to debate about plants feeling pain. Now I
pick my battles. Real idiots get ignored or a swift one-liner. As a Mother of
nearly three with a business to run and animals to save, I simply don't have the
time for those who are clearly guilty about their own carcass-filled colons.
Focus on your own life and being the biggest success you can be - that's the
best way to help animals. The better we do in our own lives and the happier we
are in personal lives - the more powerful our message spreads. We true animal
rights activists do have some post traumatic stress from seeing the visuals and
in person horrors we have seen and read about, which is why it's important to
be tender and gentle with ourselves as often as possible.

9. What is the issue nearest and dearest to
your heart that you would like others to know more about?

DAIRY! As a Mom who
has been breastfeeding and pregnant for five years - attachment parenting and
nurturing my beautiful vegan baby boys - I can only imagine the agony of a
Mother cow losing baby after baby. Seeing visuals of clips they put on calves
nose/mouth area directly after birth so they can't nurse or bond so humans can
get their milk is an image I'll never get out of my head.

That level of cruelty - when you are watching a Mother birth a child and
inflict agony upon them directly after birth - is beyond inhumane - it's
monstrous. We are the only species to ingest another species breastmilk.
Dairy is just not healthy for humans - unless it's human breastmilk for a baby
- so why on earth would anyone still eat cheese when we have Treeline cashew
cheese or drink milk when we have So Delicious dairy-free milks that aren't associated with
cancer, bloating, acne, et al.? It's beyond my ability to digest why people
wouldn't go dairy-free. And lest we forget -- there's a little bit of veal in
every glass of milk.

10. Please finish this sentence: “To me, being
vegan is...”

To me, being vegan is
just good sense. I was born in the North of England and have also always
gravitated towards people from Massachusetts. I think people from those areas
tend to be very no-nonsense and straightforward about things that just make sense
or not. I appreciate honesty and blunt realness in my life, sometimes things
are either good or bad. Veganism is good. Certain things in life are cut and
dry, and the logic behind veganism makes good, clean sense. It's simply the
right thing to do for everyone involved - your body, the earth, and the
animals.

Wednesday, March 11, 2015

Usually, I try to be
calm and positive and ever-so patient but there are times when the snark just
must be unleashed so I get back to being calm and positive and ever-so patient.
This is one of those times. This was written as what – in my mind, at least – I
would say to those who keep coming at me with feeble justifications and obvious
attempts to establish that vegans are all a bunch of hypocritical snobs. The
fact is that anyone who’s been vegan for longer than a week has heard allllllll of these “arguments” and we are
still supposed to sit there, smile and behave ourselves (lest we be accused of
being hateful) when we’ve been through it a million times. Despite this, we gather
our discipline and try not to actively guffaw in anyone’s face (or at least not
roll our eyes) when the fact of the matter is that internally, sometimes we are
doing just that.

Omnivores who like to argue, this is what I ask of you: Could you please
develop some better arguments? Pretty
please? I need the challenge and that one video on YouTube that you always
trot out to convince me that plants feel pain has only convinced me that you’re
just really desperate for more persuasive material. To the well-intentioned people
who will without a doubt remind me that sarcasm is not the best route for
creating allies, yes, I know. That’s why our material on Vegan Street is
83% snark-free. (Roughly.) I need an outlet, though, so I can continue to play nice.
I have to also remind myself that most of the time when people bring up these
ludicrous arguments, they really think they’ve got something impressive to work
with, which is why it’s up to us to (patiently, calmly, effectively) prove
otherwise. (By the way, please check out the exciting new resource for critical
thinking, Your Vegan Fallacy Is for more, more, more of the good stuff.)

That being said, oh, snark,
how I’ve missed you. Reunited and it feels
so good…

Omni: “You vegans think you’re better
than everyone else. I don’t like your superiority.”
Me: “I don’t like that you pay an industry to turn animals into products and
destroy the environment in the process so you can consume their secretions and corpses.
Should we call it even?”

Omni: “What about plants?”
Me: “What about them?”

Omni: “You kill plants when you eat them.
Plants feel pain, you know.”
Me: “I make sure that they are treated well before they die and that they don’t
suffer. Oh, wait. That only would make sense in this context if they had
sentience. Carry on.”

Omni: “But -”

Me: “Oh, wait, I
forgot to add that if you are truly concerned about plants feeling pain - also known
as responding to stimuli, which is in keeping with Darwin’s observations about
adapting to optimize favorable and reduce adverse conditions - you may want to
stop consuming the animals that eat so many more of the plants than people do.”

Omni: “But I give thanks to the animals I
eat.”
Me: “You thanked them? That's weird. I believe your manners are a bit confused. You were
supposed to apologize to them.”

Omni: “Well, whatever. I always give thanks.”Me: “I’m sure the ghost of the chicken you just ate is finally gratified because
she’s been officially thanked. Her spectral form can stop roaming the earth seeking
closure now that she knows she died for the noble cause of satisfying some
random craving of yours. Everything is all better now. Our sewage system is
certainly a dignified final resting place for all the animals you have
‘thanked’.”

Omni: “But what about the Native
Americans?”
Me: “Which tribe are we talking about?”

Omni: “Um –”Me: “Because if we are focusing on just the tribes indigenous to the United
States, there are currently more than 550 tribes. The tribes are all distinct
with different histories, practices and diets. You’re not implying that all
indigenous people are one uniform mass, are you?”

Omni: “Okay, whatever. They ate animals.”Me: “They also had no electricity, plumbing, refrigeration, modern medicine
or surgical innovations but I can see that you’re mainly interested in cherry-picking
what you want from the grab bag of vague Native American associations that
serve you. (That’s not offensive at all!) I am guessing that the objective here
is to align eating animals with a higher spiritual practice of some sort. Animals
are bred into existence, the vast majority through forcible means, mutilated
and castrated without anesthesia and kept in brutal captivity until they are no
longer cost-efficient or they have reached market weight and then they are
loaded onto trucks, often transported long distances in all weather conditions
and violently slaughtered. So, yes, many Native Americans ate and eat animals, as
have virtually all cultures throughout history, including the ones we don’t
romanticize as much. What does this have to do with you and your own habits?”

Omni: “I buy my meat from a specialty butcher
who uses everything. He even watches the animals get slaughtered.”
Me: “First of all, how very Jeffrey Dahmer of your butcher. Second, your
butcher uses all of the animal? As opposed to the animal agribusiness model,
which pretty much squeezes every last penny from an animal’s tortured
carcass?
I'm guessing you found a hipster butcher who pretty much follows the standard
operating procedure when it comes to using animals for financial gain.”

Omni: “But I buy heritage pork from hog
breeds that might not exist if not for these farmers.”Me: “So these fancy breeds are maintained only so they could be violently
slaughtered for a their flesh? That actually sounds like something a sadist or
a degenerate would do.”

Omni: “I only eat humanely-raised
animals.”Me: “Only means exclusively so I
guess this means that you never eat out and you’ve got a ton of money. Were
they ‘humanely slaughtered’ as well?”

Omni: “Yes, they were, in fact.”Me: “Using humane electrified water baths and humane bolts in the brain and
humane knives? It’s almost as if you want us to believe in a humane myth of
some sort.”

Omni: “I buy my eggs from a lady in town
and I know her chickens are treated well. I see them myself.”
Me: “Where did she buy her chicks?
What happened to the male chicks at that hatchery? What happens when her
backyard chickens are no longer productive? What happens when they need medical
care? Even if that model is a feel-good solution for you, it is a mathematical
impossibility for the rest of the world. Exactly how many earths do you think
we have to work with here?”

Omni: “Well, fine, but what about soy?”
Me: “Yes, what about it?”

Omni: “Growing soy destroys the
rainforests.”
Me: “You’re confused again. That’s not the soy I eat. That’s the soy you eat. How could this be? First the South
American rainforest is razed for cattle grazing - if you eat cow flesh, you are
responsible for this - and then when it’s been thoroughly grazed, soybeans are
mono-cropped to go into animal feed and the petroleum industry, and then more
rainforest is destroyed to graze cattle and the cycle continues until, viola,
no more rainforest. I’m happy to keep talking about soy if you’d like.”

Omni: “Well, what I don’t understand is
why you eat all those fake foods.”Me: “Vegetables, fruits, grains, herbs,
nuts and seeds – yes, there really is some next-level synthetic sorcery going on
here.”

Omni: “But why do you eat things that are
imitating hamburgers and chicken if you’re so opposed to eating meat?”Me: “Most of us did not grow up on vegan communes so there are old familiar
tastes some of us like to re-experience. The beauty of it is that we can
recreate these textures and flavors without violence and without destroying the
environment. I actually have a question now: What is up with you adding plant seasonings
to the hamburgers and chickens you eat? Also, why don’t the animals on your
plate still look like the animals they were if you’re so hunky-dory with
everything?”

Omni: “What about my canine teeth?”
Me: “Be honest: Is tooth sharpness the new penis length? Because I don’t mean for you
to get a complex over it, but, dude, have you ever given your ‘ferocious’
canine teeth a good examination in the mirror? Do I need to spell it out for
you? They aren’t that much to write home about. Do you really think you would
instill terror in the hearts of zebras everywhere with those little things? Why
don’t you compare canine teeth with a lion in his or her natural setting? Let’s
see how your teeth stack up. Oh, also, let’s check how wide your jaw can open.”
Omni: “That’s all fine and good but I didn’t claw my way to the top of the food
chain to eat salad.”
Me: “You clawed your way to ‘the top’? No, dude, you inherited the role you
were born into as a human. Even if I believed that oppressing others were an
achievement, the position you enjoy ‘at the top’ has nothing to do with any
accomplishment of yours. The only thing you’re clawing at is any limp excuse that pops into your head.”

Omni: “Whatever. Being vegan is fine for
some people but you shouldn’t try to force your views on others. It’s my
personal choice.”
Me: “Selectively breeding sentient beings into existence in order to maintain a
steady supply of future meals because we see animals as commodities we can do
what we will with – this has nothing to do with forcing your views on others,
right? Also, with water pollution and scarcity, air pollution, climate change
and countless other examples of ecological devastation to which animal
agribusiness is a or the major
contributor, isn’t eating animals imposing your ‘personal choice’ upon others?”

Omni: “Animals would take over the world
if we didn’t eat them.”Me: “Seriously? Put the bong down. Have you really put any real thought or research
into this idea? If we did nothing with the animals alive today and simply left
them alone, they would die after too long due to the structural defects that we
have intentionally bred into them to make them grow at an astonishingly fast
pace in order to satisfy our desire for an abundant, cheap supply of their
flesh and secretions. On a related note, the vast majority of these animals
also wouldn’t be able to reproduce on their own due to our direct involvement
in engineering their very bodies to optimize affordable and consumable portions
of their corpses. It’s really twisted if you think about it, which I have. When
an industry runs itself as a matter of course like something straight from the
pages of a terrifying dystopian novel, maybe moral people should do everything
we can to distance ourselves from supporting that industry. Last, have you ever
heard of supply and demand? If people don’t eat them, they won’t be bred into existence
simply to be killed.”

Omni: “But all those animals would go to waste
if we didn’t eat them.”
Me: “Insert the word ‘black people’ for animals and ‘enslave’ for eat and your
logic is virtually interchangeable with that of a 19th century slavery
apologist. Congratulations! Further, maybe women who aren’t raped ‘go to waste’
from a rapist’s perspective. You really are scraping the bottom of the barrel
to justify eating corpses here.”

Omni: “I heard somewhere that vegans actually kill more animals because of all
the plants you eat. I guess you don’t care about mice and voles.”

Me: “Ah! Now you’re a
voice for the mice and voles. How good of you. All of us create some kind of
negative environmental repercussions. What we try to do as vegans is minimize
the harm we might cause. If you are truly concerned about the mice and voles – which
I am guessing is about as sincere as your concern about plants ‘feeling pain’ –
you will want to reduce your consumption of eating animals because, by and
large, the animals in fields that would be killed by machinery and chemicals live
in the monoculture environment of cereal crops that are grown to feed the
animals you eat. So, again, if genuinely you want to reduce harm, well, you
know what I’m going to say...”

Omni: “Okay, well, the problem with you
vegans is you’re so self-righteous.”Me: “The paradigm you’ve set up is we can either be hypocrites or self-righteous,
and, if I may quote myself, I’d rather be self-righteous than
self-wrongteous."

Omni: “I just want to eat meat, okay?”
Me: “Why didn’t you just say that? Not that I’m okay with it but did we have to
go through this whole song-and-dance when that’s really what it’s about?”

Wednesday, March 4, 2015

Jennifer Cornbleet is a rocking, energetic pixie,
a longtime vegan, best-selling raw foods cookbook author
and lead instructor with the trailblazing Living Light Culinary Arts Institute in Fort Bragg, CA. As someone who has masterfully demystified the often
complicated, time-consuming and expensive world of raw foods – and is able to
create truly memorable, delicious dishes with
accessible ingredients and some easy-to-learn kitchen skills – Jennifer has
been bringing the message of vibrant, healthful living to the masses for years,
along with some really helpful tools to assist in that journey. I love her
message because it comes with no judgments, platitudes or mandates: she just
deftly removes the stumbling blocks to incorporating more healthy foods into one diet
and, in doing so, helps people to gain access to optimal good health.

I am also completely excited about Jennifer’s free interview series that will be
starting on May 11 called, “The Tasty Life: How to Turn Your Passion for
Healthy Food Into a Career You Love!” Oh, and I will be interviewed
for it along with 24 others. Woot! (We will be sharing the website once it is live.) I
love that Jennifer keeps making it easier and easier for people to live
compassionately and healthfully while never needing to give up great tasting
food. For this reason and more, we are happy to celebrate Jennifer Cornbleet as a true
vegan foodie and rockstar.

1. How did you start down this path of
creating delicious food? Was a love for food nurtured into you? Did you have
any special relatives or mentors who helped to instill this passion?

I’ve loved to cook my whole life.
My father was a great cook, and first instilled my passion for cooking when I
was seven years old and he taught me how to bake bread. Gradually, I began
helping him prepare family dinners.

2. What was your diet like when you were growing up? Did you have any favorite
meals or meal traditions? Do you carry them over today?

I became a vegetarian at the
early age of ten. My parents weren’t vegetarian, but they encouraged me to
explore vegetarian cooking. At first, my diet wasn’t very healthy, and I was
living on a lot of bread and pasta. But then I began to check out some
vegetarian cookbooks from the library—my first was Laurel’s Kitchen. And I
started making everything from lentil loaves to salads to Indian curries. Since
my family liked it when I helped with the cooking, my new interest in
vegetarianism inspired them to begin eating more vegetarian, too.
3. What is the best vegan meal you've ever had? Give us all the details!

There have been so many it’s hard
to choose! But one on my mind right now is a meal I ate recently at a vegan restaurant
called Portobello in Portland, OR.

The appetizer was a simple but
delicious salad of tender mixed greens, fennel, pear, and thinly shaved
brussels sprouts, with a sherry-mustard vinaigrette.

The second course was a homemade
penne-shaped pasta with pistachio-parsley pesto, roasted cauliflower, and
braised red cabbage.

The main dish was an incredible
roasted portobello mushroom “steak” with a balsamic glaze. It was served over a
bed of mashed celery root, with a side of roasted brussels sprouts and baby
carrots. It went beautifully with a glass of pinot noir.

Dessert was a chocolate lava cake
with coconut vanilla ice cream and raspberry sauce. [Ed.: Okay, whoa.]
4. If you could prepare one meal or dessert for anyone living or dead, who
would it be for and what would you create?

I would prepare dinner for Carl
Jung. I’m fascinated by Jungian psychology, so the chance to have a dinner
conversation with him would be amazing. And I’d serve him finger food so we
could play with it the way he played in his sandbox everyday for a year. I
always wished I could have been there with him when he did that!
5. What do you think are common mistakes in vegan cooking and how do you avoid
them?

1) The flavors are not balanced.
For example, a rice bowl that’s drenched in salty soy sauce or a salad that’s
drowning in vinegar. To avoid this, don’t add too much of a single,
strongly-flavored ingredient to a dish. Balance salty, sweet, sour, bitter, and
so on.

2) The meal is too plain and
needs a good sauce. I love the taste of veggies, but what transforms mixed
vegetables from a collection of ingredients into a delectable dish is often a
sauce, such as curry, peanut, marinara, and so on.

3) Relying too heavily on grains,
pasta, or soy instead of emphasizing fresh vegetables. Those are all great
ingredients, but I like veggies to be the focal point—which makes sense since
they’re what our bodies need to consume most.

6. What ingredients are you
especially excited about at the moment?

Right now, I’m in Portland, OR and I’m really into the local hazelnuts and
marionberries. I also like barbecued tempeh and roasted red peppers. A few
months ago, I got really excited when I discovered how to use teff to make a
risotto-like stew and teff flour to make gluten-free pancakes.

7. What are your top three cuisines from around the world?

French, Italian, and Mexican.
8. Who or what has been most influential to you on your vegan path?
Individuals, groups, books, films, etc. included.

I think cookbooks. I have a
collection of a couple of hundred of them, and I read them in bed like novels.
They keep me inspired with ideas for new recipes to create, and just thinking
about food, which is one of my favorite things to do!
9. What issue is nearest and dearest to your heart that you would like people
to know more about?

It makes me sad that we now live
in such a fast-paced world that cooking is mostly seen as a hassle to be
avoided. As a result, so many people eat processed food that was made without
any love. I wish we could get young people excited about taking the time to
cook with whole foods as an expression of creativity. [Ed.: Hear, hear!]
10. Last, please finish this sentence. "To me, veganism is…"

The optimum way to eat both for
the body and for the planet. Many people are not yet ready to be completely
vegan, but having it as an ideal to aspire to is a great thing.